Wednesday, November 18, 2015

meaning - Is it more correct to say "repeat", or "resay"?



Telling a person to repeat something they have said sounds better to me, but is it more correct to ask them to resay what they said?




If I say something then resay it, then I have said it again. I don't peat, so why would I repeat? Do I peat? What does peat mean when referred to this way?



Which is better, repeat or resay?


Answer



First of all, "repeat" doesn't actually have a prefix. So, you aren't "peating" something again.
It's a word derived from French:




repeat
late 14c., from O.Fr. repeter "say or do again, get back, demand the return of" (13c.), from L. repetere "do or say again, attack again," from re- "again" + petere "go toward, seek, demand, attack" (see petition). Specific meaning "to take a course of education over again" is recorded from 1945, Amer.Eng. Related: Repeated; repeating. The noun is first recorded 1550s.





It has a prefix in Latin, but not in English.



As you can see, "repeat" can mean 'to do or say again', so "repeat" can be used to mean to 'resay'.



Interestingly, etymonline.com and dictionary.com both don't give records of 'resay'.


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